Thrones, huge marble walls, and artwork have been stolen. A movement grows to return them. Plus, a 1,000 whales; Jimmy Carter; the Rainbow Bridge
| Thursday, February 23, 2023 | | | | |
| PHOTOGRAPHS BY RICHARD BARNES
| | Bit by bit it’s happening. Jaw-dropping masterpieces cajoled or stolen from conquered lands are being returned from U.S. and European museums to their rightful places.
Anticipating more returns, the countries of origins are building museums to house their long-lost treasures. Stuffy Western museums that resisted giving back the loot for decades—saying the world needs a place to trace all of its treasures—are switching tactics.
Will the trickle turn into a flood? Will these U.S. and European museums without some treasures be less inviting? Will the returning masterpieces entice tourists to new lands?
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| The real throne: At top, Sultan Nabil Njoya of Cameroon’s Bamum people sits on a replica of a throne commissioned by his great-grandfather. Germans took the real one in 1908. Above, Oxford’s Pitt Rivers Museum, which has returned the remains of Australian Aboriginals and is discussing repatriation with groups in Africa, Asia, and elsewhere. Read more.
Map: The lands that colonizers controlled in 1914 | | | |
| PHOTOGRAPH COURTESY EDNA CLYNE-REKHY | | | |
| PHOTOGRAPH BY CREATIVE TOUCH IMAGING LTD./NURPHOTO/GETTY IMAGES | | Beyond toxic explosions: Fiery crashes with towering smoke clouds dominate the headlines, but studies suggest that trains carry health costs even when they don’t derail. The sound and vibrations raise stress, and heightened cortisol levels can lead to various health problems, Nat Geo reports. (Pictured above, a passenger train swirling through Thiruvananthapuram, India, in 2019.)
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| PHOTOGRAPHS BY CRAIG CUTLER | | Folded beauty: Origami artist and physicist Robert J. Lang folded both of these cranes out of single uncut squares of paper. Most early origami models were fairly simple, like the traditional crane in the left image. The complexity of the crane on the right—from spindly limbs to feathered wings—was once thought to be nearly impossible. But Lang designed the paper bird during concepts from a computer problem. Origami is driving futuristic technologies as well, Nat Geo reports.
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| PHOTOGRAPH BY DAVID GUTTENFELDER | | ‘The lake is the boss’: It’s been called the Mount Everest of freshwater boating. So when Nat Geo Explorer David Guttenfelder and two others set out to kayak around Lake Superior’s wild Apostle Islands, nature had other plans. “I was impressed by the lake’s incredible power,” Guttenfelder tells Nat Geo. His photographs capture the lake's shoreline carved by ice, wind, and waves (like above on Sand Island).
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Today’s soundtrack: Ibo Lele (Dreams Come True), RAM
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